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    Sharon wrote this when she was 16 and in the llth grade£®Her goal is to become an international diplomat £¨Íâ½»¹Ù£© and peace-maker£®

    It was my first day at school£®I felt __36___ and scared£®I went to all my classes with no _37_ £®It felt like no one _38__£®I listened anxiously to all the lessons and waited for lunch __39_  at 1:00£®Then finally the bell rang£®It was time to talk and have   40   £®

    In the lunch line I met a new friend who wore a hijab £¨ÄÂ˹ÁÖ¸¾Å®´÷µÄÃæÉ´£© on her head, and though I am   41   £®we got along fine, and I was so   42   when she said, "Sit-with us, at our table£®" She pointed to the one next to the door£®

    So I   43   ,and took my tray and was _44_ to walk with her across the floor, when suddenly I felt a jog£®"Hey, I saw you on the bus," said a tall girl in a long skirt£®"I see your Jewish star necklace£®You _45_ sit with us£®"

    At that moment I looked around, and that's when I   46  ,to my surprise, the nations of the world,   47   themselves£®That's what I saw through my own eyes£®

    The Spanish only sat with Spanish, the Hindus only with Hindus, the Russians always with the Russians, and _48_ the Arabs with the Jews£®

    I saw the reason why   49   got started£®Everyone   50   to their own kind£®The    51_ was just like a map of the world, where there should never have been so much separation among nations£®But why was everyone so _52_?

    And so I turned _53__ this girl, and went with the first, and there was no offence, I built a   54   between two worlds when I sat with those   55   from me£®

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The other day I was talking to a stranger on the bus; he told me that he had a good   36  in Chicago and he wondered if, by any chance, I   37  to know him . For a moment, I thought he might be   38  ,but I could tell from the expression on his face that he was not. He was   39  . I felt like saying that it was ridiculous to  40  that out of all the millions of people in Chicago I could possibly have ever bumped into his friend. But,  41  , I just smiled and reminded him that Chicago was a very   42  city. He nodded, and I thought he was going to be content to drop the subject and talk about something else. But I was wrong. He was silent for a few minutes, and then he   43   to tell me all about his friend.
His friend¡¯s main  44  in life seemed to be tennis. He was an excellent tennis player , and he  45  had his own tennis court. There were a lot of people with swimming  46  , yet there were only two people with private tennis court; his friend in Chicago was one of them. I told him that I knew several   47  like that, including my brother, who was doctor in California. He    48  that maybe there were more private courts in the country, than he   49  but he did not know of any others. Then he asked me   50  my brother lived in California. When I said Sacramento, he said that was a coincidence 51 his Chicago friend spent the summer in Sacramento last year and he lived next door to a   52 who had a tennis court in his backyard. I  said I felt that really was a coincidence because my next-door neighbour had gone to Sacramento last summer and had   53  the house next to my brother¡¯s house. For a moment, we stared at each other, but we did not say anything.
¡°Would your friend¡¯s name happen to be Roland Kirkwood?¡± I asked finally. He   54  and said, ¡°Yes. Would your brother¡¯s name happen to be Dr Rey Hunter?¡± It was my  55   to laugh. ¡°Yes,¡± I replied.
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"Hey, Tahlia! How's the model?"
I had just taken a bite of my hot dog __21__ I heard a familiar voice yelling at me from across the crowded school yard. I saw a group of popular girls who were all __22__.
"What kind of __23_ are you going to do? An ad for a Frankenstein movie?" More laughter. My stomach twisted into a tight knot. How could they humiliate (ÐßÈè) me like this, __24__ the entire school? As I walked into the cafeteria, I __25__ the dark scars on my right hand.
At 9 months old, I knocked over a tea pot and dumped boiling water allover my hands and stomach. My parents __26__ me to the hospital, but I had to have skin graft (ÒÆÖ²) operation. I was in so much pain! But what __27__ me most were the cruel things people said about how I looked, __28__ that day at lunch.
The girls were being supermean to me because they'd heard I was considering doing some modeling. A close friend had suggested that I shouldn't let my scars limit me and that I might __29__ a good model.
But after that __30__ at school, I was sure I'd made a huge mistake. Upon arriving home, I covered the mirror with a blanket, fell on my bed and sobbed.
The next day, I __31__ myself to go to school. At lunch my best friend Jesse tried to encourage me: "You can't __32_ forever, Tahlia. So what if you have a few scars? Just go outside and show them that you're just as good as they are." Although I knew he was right, I couldn¡¯t __33__ standing up for myself like that.
However, that night as I sat on the bed, my friend's words replayed in my mind. I'm __34__ hiding from myself, I thought. How stupid! Slowly, I stood up, walked over to the __35__, and tossed the blanket aside. There, in the mirror I saw a slim, dark-haired, blue-eyed girl, looking just fine, __36__ with a few scars.
The next day I wore a comfortable T-shirt to school. What's more, I had lunch outside the cafeteria, __37__ beside those mean girls. They were shocked that I should dare to walk into their territory. I felt __38_ too¡ªfree and happy.
Sometimes people still look at me strangely. They __39_ and stare, but I don't let it get to me. I have applied to several modeling companies, and at least one company is considering me for jobs. Maybe I'll never __40_ posing on the runway, but I do know one thing: I'm done.

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It was in my high school science class£®1 was doing a task in front of the classroom with my favorite shirt on£®
A  36  came£¬¡°Nice shirt£¬¡±I smiled from ear to ear£®Then another voice said£¬¡°That shirt belonged to my dad£®Greg¡¯s mother works for my family£®We were going to  37  that shirt away£¬but gave it to her 38 ¡±. I was speechless I wanted to hide£®
I  39 the shirt in the back of the closet and told my mum what had happened£®She then dialed her 40  ,¡°I will no longer work for your family£¬¡±she told him£®That night£®Morn told my dad that she couldn¡¯t clean anymore£ºshe knew her life¡¯s 41 was something greater£®
The next morning she 42 with the personnel manager at the Board of Education£®He told her that without a proper education she could not teach£®So Morn decided to  43  a university.
After the first year in college£¬she went back to the personnel manager£®He said£¬¡°You are  44  £¬aren¡¯t you? I think I have a 45  for you as a teacher¡¯s assistant£®This opportunity deals with children who are mentally challenged with little or no chance of  46 ¡±Mom accepted the opportunity very 47
For almost five years£¬as a teacher¡¯s assistant£®she saw teacher after teacher give up on the children and quit£¬feeling  48  £®Then one day£¬the personnel manager and the principal 49  in her classroom£®The principal said£®¡°We have watched how you  50 the children and how they communicate with you and admire your hard£®working  51  over the last five years£®We are all in agreement that you 52  be the teacher of this class£®¡±
My mom spent more than 20 years there£®  53 her career£¬she was voted Teacher of the Year£®All of this came about because of the  54  comment made in the classroom that day£®Mom showed me how to handle  55 situations and never give up£®

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As a young man, Al was a skilled artist£®He had a wife and two fine sons£®One night, his  oldest son developed a severe stomachache£®Thinking it was only some   36   intestinal £¨³¦Äڵģ©disorder, neither Al nor his wife took the condition very seriously£®But the boy   37   suddenly that night£®
Knowing the death could have been   38    if he had only realized the seriousness of the situation, Al's emotional health became worse under the huge burden of his   39     To make matters worse his wile   40   him a short time later, leaving him alone with his six-year-old younger son£®The hurt and pain of the two   41   were more than Al could handle, and he   42  to alcohol£®In time Al became an alcoholic£®
43___ the alcoholism progressed, Al began to lose everything he   44   ¡ª his home, his land, his art objects, everything£®  45   Al died alone in a San Francisco motel room£®
When I heard of Al's death, I thought that Al's life was a complete   46 £®
As time went by, I began to re-evaluate my earlier judgment£®I knew Al's now   47   son, Ernie£®He is one of the kindest, most caring, most loving men I have ever known£®I watched Ernie with his children and saw the free   48   of love between them£®I knew that kindness and caring had to come from somewhere£®
I hadn't heard Ernie talk much about his  49__£®One day I worked __50_ my courage to ask him£®"I'm really _51__ by something," I said£®"I know your father was  52  _ the only one to raise you£®What on earth did he do that you became such a special person?"
Ernie sat quietly and _53__ for a few moments£®Then he said, "From my earliest _54_ as a child until I left home at 18, Al came into my room every night, gave me a kiss and said, ' I love you, son£®' "
Tears came to my eyes as I realized what a fool I had been to __55_ Al as a failure£®He had not left any material possessions behind£®But he had been a kind loving father, and he left behind one of the finest, most giving men I have ever known£®
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When a person is curious about something, it means he is interested in it and wishes to know something about it. There is   16   wrong with curiosity in itself. Whether it is good or bad   17  on what people are curious about.

   Curiosity  18  can be foolish or wrong. Some people with nothing to do are  19  of curiosity about what their neighbors are doing. They have a strong wish to know what they are   20  home or taking outside, or why they have come home so  21  or late. To be interested in these things is silly because it is none of their 22   to know what their neighbors do or are doing. Such curiosity is not only foolish but also 23  . For most probably, it may lead to a small talk  24  often brings harm, loss of honor or disrespect to others, and thus  25  their feelings.

  On the other hand, there is a  26  curiosity- the curiosity of wise men, who  27  at all the great things and try to find out all they  28  learn about them. Columbus could  29  have found America if he had not been  30 . James Walt would not have made the steam engine  31   his curiosity about the rising of the kettle lid. All the  32  in human history have been made as a  33  of curiosity, 34   the clever curiosity is never about unimportant things which have  35  or nothing to do with the happiness of the public.

1.A. anything           B. everything           C. nothing      D. something

2. A. keeps             B. puts             C. takes            D. depends

3. A. always                B. sometimes            C. unusually        D. seldom

4. A. full              B. certain              C. proud            D. careful

5.A. taking             B. bringing         C. going            D. coming

6. A. quickly               B. hurriedly            C. early            D. happily

7.A. business           B. task             C. duty         D. work

8. A. instructive           B. useful               C. harmful      D. proper

9. A. who               B. which                C. when         D. where

10.A. hurts             B. injures              C. breaks           D. destroys

11.A. terrible              B. sudden           C. strange      D. clever

12. A. expect               B. like             C. wonder       D. doubt

13.A. need              B. must             C. may          D. can

14. A. never                B. certainly            C. surely           D. probably

15.A. famous                B. careful              C. curious      D. hard

16. A. for                  B. without          C. with         D. in

17. A. products         B. goods                C. discoveries      D. machines

18. A. profit               B. product          C. fruit            D. result

19. A. but                  B. however          C. so           D. or

20.A. little                B. few              C. some         D. any

 

 

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